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Global Sourcing

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Global Sourcing Antras & Helpman 2004 Industry Equilibrium Upon observing , a final-good producer H chooses the ownership structure and the location maximizing ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Global Sourcing


1
Global Sourcing
  • Antras Helpman 2004

2
Overview
  • N-S Model
  • Final Goods Producers situated in North.
  • Choice of location to source inputs
  • Equilibrium in which firms with different
    productivity levels choose different ownership
    structures
  • Effects of within-sectoral heterogeneity and
    variations in industry on prevalance of
    organizational forms.
  • Antràs 2003 with incorporation of heterogeneity a
    la Melitz 2003.

3
Background
  • Different ownership models Standard vertical
    integration, FDI, outsourcing abroad, outsourcing
    in domestic country
  • Example Intels FDI strategy
  • Example Nikes arms-length import strategy
  • Powerful role of international specialization
  • WTO 1998 Annual Report In the production of an
    American car, 30 of the cars value in Korea,
    17.5in Japan, 7.5 in Germanyonly 37 of
    production value in America!

4
The Model
  • representative consumer in each country with
    quasi-linear preferences
  • Aggregate consumption in sector j is a CES
    function
  • Elasticity of substitution within sector between
    varieties 1/1-Alpha
  • Inverse Demand function

5
Technology
  • Producers of differentiated goods face a
    perfectly elastic supply of labor.
  • wN gt wS
  • Monopolistic competition
  • As in Melitz (2003), producers needs to incur
    sunk entry costs wN fE, after which they learn
    their productivity ? G (?).
  • As in Antràs (2003a), final-good production
    combines two specialized inputs, according to the
    technology

6
Technology
  • H final-good producer (agent H), m supplier
    (agent M).
  • Sectors vary in their intensity of headquarter
    services
  • Within sectors, firms differ in productivity ?
  • After observing ?, H decides exit or produce.
  • Producing incurs additional fixed costs depending
    on
  • k ? V, O and l ? N, S,

7
Contracts
  • Incomplete contracts
  • dN dS In times of contractual breach,
    Integration in North can recover a higher
    fraction of output.
  • The outside option of H under outsourcing is
    zero.
  • The outside option of M is zero regardless of
    ownership structure and location.
  • Hs profit-maximizing organizational mode will
    also maximize joint profits.

8
Equilibrium
  • Profit function
  • By choosing k and l, H is chooses triplet (ßlk,
    wl, f lk)
  • Profit is decreasing in f and w
  • plk is largest when ßlk ß(?)

9
Industry Equilibrium
  • Upon observing ?, a final-good producer H chooses
    the ownership structure and the location
    maximizing profit, or exits the industry and
    forfeits the fixed cost of entry wN fE
  • j
  • Firms with ? ? (X) stay in the industry
  • Free entry condition

10
Organizational Forms Trade offs
  • Location decision Variable costs are lower in
    the South, but fixed costs are higher there.
  • Integration decision Integration improves
    efficiency of variable production when the
    intensity of headquarter services is high, but
    involves higher fixed costs. This decision will
    depend on ?, but also on ?.

11
Component Intensive Sector
  • This implies ?O (?) gt ?V (?) for l N, S, which
    together with the fixed costs ordering implies
    that any form of integration is dominated in
    equilibrium.

12
Headquarter Intensive Sector
  • All four organizational forms exist in
    equilibrium

13
Relative Prevalence
  • Relative prevalence is measured by the share of
    products produced in various organizational forms
    (V or O, in N or S).
  • Distribution
  • sMO the fraction of active firms that outsource
    in country l in the component-intensive sector.
  • Then
  • Substituting for the cutoffs yields

14
Relative Prevalance Component-intensive
  • Decline in Southern wage rate?
  • Fall in Transport costs?
  • Increase in dispersion of productivity?

z
15
Relative Prevalance Headquarter-intensive
  • A fall in the relative wage in the South or in
    trading costs, raise the share of imported inputs
    and also raise outsourcing relative to
    integration in every country.
  • Industries with more productivity dispersion
    (lower z), have a higher share of imported inputs
    and integration is higher relative to outsourcing
    in every country.
  • Sectors with higher headquarter intensity (higher
    ?), the share of imported inputs is lower and
    integration is higher relative to outsourcing.
    Consistent with Antràs (2003a) that the share of
    intra-firm imports in total U.S. imports is
    significantly higher, the higher the RD
    intensity of the industry.
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